F. J. Lewis Manufacturing Co. v. Pennsylvania Railroad

258 Ill. App. 216, 1930 Ill. App. LEXIS 564
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 30, 1930
DocketGen. No. 34,233
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 258 Ill. App. 216 (F. J. Lewis Manufacturing Co. v. Pennsylvania Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
F. J. Lewis Manufacturing Co. v. Pennsylvania Railroad, 258 Ill. App. 216, 1930 Ill. App. LEXIS 564 (Ill. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Matchett

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal by defendant from a judgment in the sum of $266.21 entered upon the finding of the court. The declaration of plaintiff consisted of the common counts only. The action is based on the collection by defendant of a check to which the name of plaintiff was forged. Defendant filed a plea of the general issue with notice of special defenses: (1) that the negligence on the part of plaintiff precluded recovery; and (2) that the period of time between the date of the forgery and the discovery of the same by plaintiff was sufficient to prevent a recovery;

There is no controversy as to any material facts. In September, 1925, plaintiff maintained in its business a department called the “Liquids Despatch Line.” This department had its own bank account at the Standard Trust & Savings Bank in Chicago, and this account was separate and apart from other accounts of plaintiff. F. J. Lewis and W. H. Lewis had authority to sign checks on the account of the Liquids Despatch Line without any counter-signatures. Mr. Curda and Mr. J. R. O’Connor had authority to sign such checks jointly.

Up to August, 1922, F. J. Lewis was president of the plaintiff company, and thereafter he was chairman of its board of directors. Plaintiff employed one Shilling, whose usual duties were to keep the records of tank cars used in plaintiff’s business.

On October 1, 1925, Shilling bought from one Flohr, á ticket agent of defendant railroad company in Chicago, four railroad tickets. The reservations were made by Shilling in the name of plaintiff company. Flohr had known Shilling for three or four years prior to this transaction, and he took in payment of these tickets and reservations the check of plaintiff to the order of defendant drawn upon the account of the Liquids Despatch Line in the Standard Trust & Savings Bank. The check appears in the record as Exhibit 1. Upon its face it is as follows:

“Liquids Despatch Like
We furnish tank cars for transportation of all kinds of liquids
Paid Chicago, 9/26/25 No. 11912
10-3-25 Pay To Order of
2.-26 Pennsylvania Railroad Co. $218.96
Exactly Two Hundred Eighteen Dollars Ninety-six Cents
Liquids Despatch Line
Countersigned by W. H. Lewis
J. R. O’Connor Agent
Standard Trust & Savings Bank
2.26 ’ Chicago ’ ’

In the upper left-hand corner of the face of the check appears the printed statement: “Payee in indorsing this check acknowledges payment in full of the following accounts: No. 10125 — $218.96.” In the lower left-hand corner is the printed statement: “Void if detached. " On the back of the check appears the indorsement by a stamp: “For deposit only to the credit of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company, C. R. Mersch, Agent” and the further indorsement: “Paid through Chicago Clearing House, October 3, 1925, to the First National Bank of Chicago.”

On the same date, October 3, 1925, the Standard Trust & Savings Bank deducted the amount of the check from the account of the Liquids Despatch Line at that bank, and at the end of the month rendered to plaintiff a statement showing such payment on account of the check. The signature of W. H. Lewis upon this check was a forgery.

When, according to its custom, in October, 1925, the Standard Trust & Savings Bank rendered a statement of its account to plaintiff, Mr. O’Connor and Mr. Binchey were bookkeepers for plaintiff. By the system then in operation, after the canceled checks were returned from the bank they were handed to Mr. Binchey, who would check the same against the bank statements and would then compare the deposits as shown on the statements with his records. After checking the canceled checks and the bank statements against his records and the check register, and finally after deducting the amount of outstanding checks, he would balance the bank statements with his bank account on the books.

Plaintiff did not discover this particular forgery until May, 1927, and on June 22,1927, for the first time demanded that defendant pay to it the amount of the check, which defendant refused to do.

These four railroad tickets were never delivered to plaintiff company nor used by it. Plohr, the agent of defendant, had taken the checks of the Liquids Despatch Line before in payment of tickets sold to Shilling for plaintiff,. and no person other than Shilling ever bought tickets from defendant railroad company for plaintiff before that time.

The court refused to allow questions as to whether Shilling held any property of plaintiff in his own name and as to whether prior to this time he, Shilling, had forged other checks of the Liquids Depatch Line. Defendant, upon objection by plaintiff, stated that he proposed to show by the witness that beginning in 1919 and up to 1927, Shilling forged checks totaling in the “vicinity” of $70,000, and that it was not discovered by the F. J. Lewis Manufacturing Company over that period of eight years. Evidence as to whether W. H. Lewis in 1925 ever looked at the bank statement as returned, as to whether Binchey in 1925 or thereafter made any report about the returned checks being forged, and as to when plaintiff first discovered that its checks were being forged by Shilling, was all excluded upon the theory that the negligence of plaintiff was wholly immaterial.

At the close of the evidence propositions of law and of fact were submitted. At the request of plaintiff the court held as law:

“That where a person or corporation obtains money of another, which it is inequitable or unjust for it to retain, the person entitled to it may maintain an action for money had and received for its recovery, and it is not necessary that there should be an express promise to pay, as the law implies a promise.

“That where a person or corporation receives a sum of money by means of a forged check to which one of the required signatures for the maker was forged, and retains the proceeds thereof, the maker can in an action in assumpsit for money had and received, recover such sum of money from the person or corporation so receiving and retaining the proceeds of said forged check. ’ ’

The court further held that the maker’s negligence in not sooner discovering the forgery was no defense to the action; that a person or corporation called upon to act upon the faith of the written instrument must ascertain its genuineness at its peril. The court refused to find as a fact, as requested by defendant, that the defendant was not negligent.

It is the contention of defendant that it is the law in this State that in the absence of fraud a purported maker of a check on which the signature of the maker was forged, who pays the same when it is presented, cannot recover the amount thereof from the payee in the check; that this proposition of law is applicable to the facts of this case, and that the court erred in holding to the contrary.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
258 Ill. App. 216, 1930 Ill. App. LEXIS 564, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/f-j-lewis-manufacturing-co-v-pennsylvania-railroad-illappct-1930.